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2 - Arabic Logic up to Avicenna

from PART I - PERIODS AND TRADITIONS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2016

Ahmad Hasnawi
Affiliation:
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris
Wilfrid Hodges
Affiliation:
Queen Mary, University of London
Catarina Dutilh Novaes
Affiliation:
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
Stephen Read
Affiliation:
University of St Andrews, Scotland
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Summary

In this chapter we discuss, first, how the Arabic logicians up to the end of the tenth century took over Greek material and added to it material of their own and how they reshaped the subject of logic in the process. We have included references to the young Averroes, although he wrote in the twelfth century, inasmuch as he belongs in the tradition of al-Fārābī (d. 950). After this we turn to the formal innovations of Avicenna's in the early eleventh century. Many of the questions that we discuss are treated also in Street (2004).

THE GREEK LOGICAL HERITAGE

Arabic logic as a branch of philosophy was heir to ancient Greek logic, and it belonged essentially to the Peripatetic tradition. Arabic grammar, Islamic jurisprudence and Islamic disputative theology (kalām) developed independent methods of reasoning and inevitably there was some interaction between these methods and those of logic as a philosophical discipline. This interaction ranged from conflict to absorption. The Greek Peripatetic logic was embodied in Aristotle's logical texts, which later became known as the Organon, together with the commentaries on them by Roman Empire scholars of various philosophical persuasions. These commentaries were the product of an activity which had run for eight centuries when the Arab philosophers became aware of it.

The Arabic Organon was in fact the extended Organon first contemplated in Late Antiquity, which began with Porphyry's Isagoge as an introduction and went on to include Aristotle's Rhetoric and Poetics. But what was only programmatic in Late Antiquity became a reality for the Arabic logicians. They conceived the Organon as embodying a system of logic. The formal heart of the system lay in its third book, the Prior Analytics, which aims to give the general theory of reasoning or of the syllogism (qiyās). The first two treatises, i.e. Categories (although its place here was challenged, in particular by Avicenna) and On Interpretation, are preparatory to the formal part. The remaining volumes adapt the theory of reasoning to different fields of human activity: to scientific activity, but also to social fields of communication. Logic as providing a method for science was the object of Aristotle's Posterior Analytics, while logic as providing a tool in order to systematise various fields of social communication was the object of the rest of the books of the Organon.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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